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On the evolutionary origin of declarative pointing

Author

Summary, in English

Imperative and declarative pointing are distinct kinds of communicative acts that rely on different cognitive capacities in the speakers. Declarative pointing is an important precursor to language, seen from both an evolutionary and a developmental perspective. Declarative pointing is functionally independent of affective intersubjectivity, yet it is intimately related to it in development. It is argued that declarative pointing once evolved because it allows for the mutual evaluation of joint objects of attention. Interaffectivity and joint attention to a distal object together constitute the prerequisites for using declarative pointing for the purpose of evaluation. Mutual evaluation has the benefits of enhancing co-operation and allowing for vicarious learning. It also makes possible the non-linguistic, active interrogation of others about their attitudes to jointly attended objects.

Publishing year

2004

Language

English

Pages

1-10

Document type

Conference paper

Topic

  • Philosophy
  • Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology)

Keywords

  • pointing
  • evolution of communication
  • intentional communication
  • evaluation

Conference name

Workshop on Mirror neurons, Mind-Reading and the Emergence of Language

Conference date

2004-03-20

Status

Unpublished